Farmers Bank of Lynchburg v. Farrar

4 Tenn. App. 186, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 2, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 186 (Farmers Bank of Lynchburg v. Farrar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Bank of Lynchburg v. Farrar, 4 Tenn. App. 186, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The bill in this case was filed in the chancery court of Lincoln County, on January 22, 1923, by the Farmers Bank of Lynchburg, a Tennessee banking corporation, against R. L. Farrar, Cora Farrar, D. W. K. Shofner, C. W. Shofner, trustee, the Chica-mauga Trust Company and the Prudential Insurance Company of America.

R. L. Farrar and Cora Farrar are husband and wife. C. W. Shof-ner and D. W. K. Shofner are brothers of Mrs. Cora Farrar. The Farrars and C. W. Shofner are citizens of Lincoln County, Tennessee, and D. W. K. Shofner is a resident of Humphreys County, Tennessee. The Chicamauga Trust Company is a Tennessee corporation with its place of business at Chattanooga, Tennessee, and the Prudential Insurance Company of America is a non-resident corporation with its office and place of business in the City of Newark, New Jersey.

It is alleged in the bill that complainant is the holder of three notes executed by the defendants D. W. K. Shofner and R. L. Farrar, aggregating $2770.12,- which notes are past due and unpaid and, together with accrued interest and attorney’s fees provided for therein, are justly due and owing to the complainant from defendants R. L. Farrar and D. W. 3L Shofner.

It is further alleged that the defendants R. L. Farrar and D. W. K. Shofner are wholly insolvent and have no property subject to execution at law.

It is further alleged in the bill' that defendant R. L. Farrar is the owner of two tracts of land situated in the 5th Civil District of Lincoln County, Tennessee, aggregating about sixty-nine acres. The aforesaid two tracts of land are described in the bill and it appears from the record that the two tracts adjoin each other and have been occupied as one farm.

It is further alleged that on June 5, 1914, the defendants Farrar and wife conveyed the aforesaid land to the defendant Chicamauga Trust Company, as trustee, to secure a note of even date with said conveyance for the sum of $3100, executed by said Farrar and wife to said Insurance Company, due June 5, 1919, with interest from its date at five and one-half per centum per annum, payable semiannually, and that the payment of said note has been extended to June 5. 1924.

*189 The foregoing averments of the bill are admitted by the defendants and the controversy in this suit arises out of averments of the bill which will now be stated.

Complainant alleges that, on June 22, 1922, defendant R. L. Farrar executed another deed of trust conveying the same tracts of land to the defendant C. W. Shofner, as trustee, to secure an alleged indebtedness of said R. L. Farrar to his wife, the defendant Cora Farrar, represented by a note for $4000 executed by defendant R. L. Farrar to his said wife and bearing even date with the deed of trust and due in three years, with interest from its date, and that the consideration for said indebtedness is recited in the instrument as follows:

“AVhereas I, Robert L. Farrar, am justly indebted to my wife, Cofa N. Farrar, in the sum of four thousand dollars, ($4000) for moneys loaned to me from time to time by her, together with the interest accrued thereon, and which money so loaned to me arose partly from my said wife’s interest in her mother’s estate, and partly from accumulations and investments which she had made from disposing of chickens, eggs, poultry, butter, pigs, etc., and which chickens, eggs, poultry, butter, pigs, etc., were her individual property.”

A duly certified copy of said deed of trust to defendant C. W. Shofner, trustee, is filed as Exhibit No. I to complainant’s bill.

Complainant further alleges in its bill that at the time said deed of trust was executed by defendant R. L. Farrar to defendant C. W. Shofner, as trustee, defendant R. L. Farrar was wholly insolvent; that at that time defendant R. L. Farrar was indebted to complainant to the amount set out in the bill and sued on in this case; that defendant R. L. Farrar was also indebted to other persons to a very large amount and said tracts of land constituted practically all the assets he had; that said lands, worth only six or seven thousand dollars, were then encumbered by the aforesaid mortgage to the Chicamauga Trust Company as trustee for the Prudential Insurance Company of America.

Complainant further alleges that at the time the said deed of trust was executed' by defendant R. L. Farrar to defendant C. "W. Shofner as trustee, the defendant R. L. Farrar was not indebted to his wife, the defendant Cora Farrar, in any’amount, and certainly not to the amount expressed in the note described in said instrument; that defendant Cora Farrar received no such amount from her mother’s estate and that the sums she did receive from her mother’s estate were expended by. her and not by her said husband, and were never loaned by her to her said husband; that *190 defendant Cora Farrar never possessed any money to the amount of said note to loan her said husband, or an amount near that sum, and that, in fact, she never made any loan whatever to her said husband as recited in said deed of trust; that whatever amount or sums of hers were used by her said husband were never used by him as loans, were never considered as loans by herself and husband, and were never regarded or treated as an indebtedness of said R. L. Farrar to his wife until defendant R. L. Farrar became indebted to the point of insolvency; that if any of the defendant Cora Farrar’s means were ever used by her husband, they were reduced to his possession and piade his own property and assets, and were never borrowed from his said wife; that if said moneys were loaned by the said defendant Cora Farrar to her said husband, said indebtedness was kept a profound secret for the fraudulent purpose of enabling her husband to secure credit; that neither the complainant nor any other creditor of R. L. Farrar ever heard of the existence of said indebtedness until after said mortgage was filed for record in the Register’s Office of Lincoln County, Tennessee, and that, complainant’s debts were contracted by defendant F'arrar on the faith of his ownership of said tracts of land; that the idea of treating any sums of the defendant Cora Farrar converted by her husband to his own use, behoof and benefit, as a debt owing by the husband to the wife, was wholly an afterthought on the part of said Farrar and wife, conceived after the defendant R. L. Farrar had become insolvent; that said deed of trust was executed for the purpose of hindering, delaying, defeating and defrauding the creditors of said defendant Cora Farrar, and especially complainant; that the defendant Cora Far-rar well knew the purpose of her husband in executing said deed of trust, and willingly and knowingly participated in said fraud by insisting on the execution of said note and deed of trust and accepting the benefits of the same. The complainant charges in its bill that said deed of trust, so executed by Farrar to defendant Shofner as trustee, is entirely null and void; and complainant filed its bill to have the same so declared and set aside, and to have said lands sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of its said debts, and the bill contains an appropriate prayer to that end.

Complainant also prayed for a writ of attachment to be levied on the lands described in the bill, and that defendants Farrar and wife and C. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 186, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-of-lynchburg-v-farrar-tennctapp-1926.